Common Snipe

bécassine des marais, common snipe, agachadiza comun, Nicolas Urlacher, wildlife of kenya, birds
Names and conservation status
bécassine des marais, common snipe, agachadiza comun, Nicolas Urlacher, wildlife of kenya, birds
Nairobi National Park
bécassine des marais, common snipe, agachadiza comun, Nicolas Urlacher, wildlife of kenya, birds
Nairobi National Park

bécassine des marais, common snipe, agachadiza comun, Nicolas Urlacher, wildlife of kenya, birds
Nairobi National Park
bécassine des marais, common snipe, agachadiza comun, Nicolas Urlacher, wildlife of kenya, birds
Nairobi National Park
bécassine des marais, common snipe, agachadiza comun, Nicolas Urlacher, wildlife of kenya, birds
Nairobi National Park

The common snipe is a small, stocky wader native to the Old World. The scientific name gallinago is New Latin for a woodcock or snipe from Latin gallina, "hen" and the suffix -ago, "resembling".

 

The breeding habitat is marshes, bogs, tundra and wet meadows throughout northern Europe and northern Asia. It is migratory, with European birds wintering in southern and western Europe and Africa (south to the Equator), and Asian migrants moving to tropical southern Asia. 

 

It is a well camouflaged bird, it is usually shy and conceals itself close to ground vegetation and flushes only when approached closely. When flushed, they utter a sharp note that sounds like scape, scape and fly off in a series of aerial zig-zags to confuse predators. They forage in soft mud, probing or picking up food by sight. They mainly eat insects and earthworms, also some plant material.

 

The male performs "winnowing" display during courtship, flying high in circles and then taking shallow dives to produce a "drumming" sound by vibrating its tail feathers. This sound has been compared by others to the bleating of a sheep or goat; hence in many languages the snipe is known by names signifying “flying goat,” “heaven's ram,” as in Scotland by “heather-bleater” and in Finnish the name taivaanvuohi, "sky goat".

 

Overall, the species is not threatened. Populations on the southern fringes of the breeding range in Europe are however declining with local extinction in some areas (notably in parts of England and Germany), mainly due to field drainage and agricultural intensification. The Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) applies to the species. It is still hunted as a gamebird in much of its range.

 

Source : wikipedia